5.06.2013

I
spent two days in Cumberland City, Tennessee photographing the TVA
[Tennessee Valley Authority] Cumberland Fossil plant. Initially I was
interested in the plant, because it is one of the largest plants in the
TVA system, and it produces the most electricity out of all the TVA
plants. Also it had a history of causing large fish kills because of the
extremely high temperature water it releases back into Lake Barkley.

It
was a cold and rainy February in 2011. As I drove into town I could see
the plant, its tall chimneys towering over the Tennessee river and
surrounding countryside. As I drove in circles around the plant looking
for a shot, I realized that nothing I was seeing really captured the
size and effect of the plant.

The next day, I drove up
and parked near the water outflow of the plant. I set up my camera and
within five minutes I had a warning citation in my hand, issued by a TVA
police officer. No photography of the plant, a new regulation set after
9/11.

By this time, it was really raining and I was
determined not to leave without an image of the plant. I drove down a
levee, and found a beach that was littered with dead fish. I realized
that this was the image I had been waiting for, the river, the plant and
the direct effect of the plant on the surrounding ecosystem.